Smoke Alarms & Carbon Monoxide Detectors
Smoke Alarms Most people who die in a fire are in homes without a
working smoke alarm. ...
Parking
Blue Can I transfer unused time to another parking spot? What if I don’t have a credit card? What
are prepaid parking vouchers? Blue Can I still use coins? Blue
2021 Special Event Minor Grant Recipients
View the 2021 Special Event Minor Grant Recipients.
Māmowimīwēyitamōwin Park
Although the buffalo are not here on this land as they used to be in the millions, they are still
in our hearts, our memories, our stories, songs and dances. Walk the
outline of the Buffalo Effigy to feel that energy and spirit of the buffalo returning. Walking it
will activate the effigy and the call for the buffalo to return to this land. There are bird houses
in the trees and snags near the buffalo willows. These represent the bird garden for this park.
Where there are buffaloes there are always buffalo birds. We are honouring those connections to the
land and species that have been reliant on the buffalo for millennia. Thank you to Joel Mowchenko
of the Treaty Land Sharing Network for his support and in providing the boulders for this project.
The Flower of Life Brianne LaPlante (in Partnership with Buckets & Borders for “The Yard”
Basketball Court restoration), 2022 In 2022 Buckets & Borders worked with Brianna LaPlant to
create the mural on the basketball court within Māmowimīwēyitamōwin Park. Brianne is a fine artist
from Fishing Lake First Nation and grew up in Regina playing basketball in North Central at the
Regent Park courts. Her work is predominantly within the two-dimensional realm, bringing spaces to
life through the choices of line, colour, pattern, and symbolism. Artwork is an act of lifelong
learning and resilience for her as an Anishinaabe/Nehiyaw/Metis creator. The Flower of Life
represents the cycle of creation and the many paths we cross within our individual spheres as a
community. Buffalo Futurism Experience Māmowimīwēyitamōwin Park through an Augmented Reality (AR)
lens. The Buffalo Futurism app is a digital art installation that transforms the physical park into
an Indigenous futuristic park. Walk among digital Buffalo, crocuses, tipis, zombies and more while
hearing stories about the significance of Tatanga. Buffalo Futurism incorporates the Buffalo Effigy
placed around Māmowimīwēyitamōwin Park. The effigy is made from 17 boulders - or grandfathers -
which have been in the park since 2022. The project involves local artists, including narration by
Joely BigEagle-Kequahtooway, app development by Rene Dufour-Contreras, and coordination by Evie
Johnny Ruddy. Learn more about the project at the Common Weal website. Use the links below to download the app.
Public Art
Adapted Sport and Recreation Funding Recipients
View the Adapted Sport and Recreation Funding Recipients.